- cross-posted to:
- fuckcars@lemmy.world
- Europe@europe.pub
- cross-posted to:
- fuckcars@lemmy.world
- Europe@europe.pub
30 associations are proposing to the European Commission to impose a limit on the size of new cars, in particular the total width and bonnet.
A report connected with this request showed that the average bonnet height of newly-sold cars in Europe is increasing by 0.5 cm a year.
Many studies showed that bigger cars and higher bonnets are related to more collisions, and worse outcome for pedestrians and cyclists (and those in smaller cars), especially in regards to children
Those SUVs are kid crushers, they shouldn’ be on our roads
crossposed from: https://mastodon.uno/users/rivoluzioneurbanamobilita/statuses/114674420551539891
You are missing my point. To turn this into a law, there need to be clear rules of what is or isn’t allowed.
The Kia you’re talking about is this one I guess? The EV5?
Unfortunately, the size comparison site I used doesn’t have that, but it is apparently similar to their “Sportage” SUV, so I took the long wheel base version of that one to compare it against your old Mondeo…
… which is longer than the SUV…
… and only 5cm less wide …
… and has much less cargo volume.
So, what kind of rules do you come up with to get rid of the one but not the other? Height? Then what about the vans? And how is height making a car more or less unethical?
So far, the 3.5 ton weight limit seems to have worked well for keeping the most ridiculous American cars off European streets. But it seems that’s not enough, so what other rules could be used to define which cars shouldn’t be allowed to drive around? It’s obviously not weight because we already have that. It’s apparently not the size because despite most arguments, SUVs aren’t always much bigger than other cars that are usually perceived as fine. So what is it??
Bonnet height, as the article suggests. Or do the responsible thing and measure front visibility, so you don’t hit vans in the process.
But isn’t that already part of regulations 78/2009 and 2019/2144?
I mean, I’m all for it, but if it’s just that it seems the goal is to get more detailed regulations for the bonnet then that’s great, but I fail to see how that would get rid of SUVs or other larger cars.
Also don’t misunderstand me there… Reducing bonnet height to protect pedestrians on impact is a good thing and should be done. I just don’t think it’d reduce car weight or size, so if that’s the goal then it won’t help.
EuroNCAP suggested to try to change something, apparently they are not catching in their test, but they acknowledge the issue
https://etsc.eu/calls-grow-to-address-safety-risks-of-large-vehicles-in-urban-areas/
Fair enough.